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Planes vulnerable to bombs built on board, ingredients hidden in daily objects: Experts
The Hindu News ^ | August 10, 2006 | Staff

Posted on 08/10/2006 11:48:06 AM PDT by WmShirerAdmirer

Planes vulnerable to bombs built on board, ingredients hidden in daily objects: Experts Dublin, Aug. 10 (AP): The next terrorist attacks on civilian aircraft could be carried out by passengers who hide their bomb ingredients in innocent-looking containers for talcum powder, baby formula or medicine bottles and assemble their weapon behind a locked restroom door, security experts warn.

The announcement on Thursday of a foiled terror plot aiming to blow up flights from London to the United States using explosives hidden in hand luggage pointed to a potential new chapter in the battle against airline terrorism: a world of hours-long security checks, visual inspections of prescription drugs, and bans on bringing liquids or laptops on board.

Several bomb-disposal experts and troubleshooters for airline security interviewed by The Associated Press said mobile phones, computers, wrist watches or anything else with a battery should be prohibited from flights.

Perhaps most chillingly, they warn that security staff at airports are not looking for the right things anymore _ and the change in tactics required is likely to overwhelm current security standards.

``That theater we see, of people taking off shoes, is not going to stop a suicide bomber. The terrorists have already sniffed out the weak spots and are adopting new tactics,'' said Irish security analyst Tom Clonan, who noted that security measures usually adapt to the last attack, not the next threat.

He said that a terrorist group will almost certainly try to blow up a plane with a bomb assembled on board unless security measures improved fundamentally.

Anti-terrorist authorities in Britain and the United States declined to describe the bomb design used by terrorists in the foiled plot _ whether they were primarily liquid or, more likely, contained liquids in a more complex ingredient list.

Whatever the case, experts predicted passengers may soon have to change their travel habits radically.

``Every businessman needs to have his laptop on a long-haul flight, and now you won't be able to. Even a battery-operated watch would provide enough power for a detonator. All you need is one shock,'' said Alan Hatcher, managing director of the International School for Security and Explosives Education in Salisbury, England.

Airlines have toyed with the idea of banning innocuous personal-care items from carry-on luggage following previous security scares, only to have the focus switch elsewhere because of the mammoth difficulty of enforcing tougher rules. Thursday's announcement dramatically raises the likelihood that security will come first no matter what the logistical hurdles.

The technology for the kind of liquid or crystallized explosives possibly involved in the thwarted terror plot is not new.

The threat first appeared in January 1995 in the Philippines, when police stumbled upon a suspected al-Qaida plot to target U.S.-bound, long-haul planes with bombs based on nitroglycerine carried on board in containers for contact-lens solution.

At that time, aviation authorities announced plans to ban aerosols, bottled gels and containers of liquids holding more than 30 milliliters on U.S. airliners departing Manila, an idea never properly enforced.

Even then, baby formula was excluded from the limits _ even though, in its powdered form, it could provide a good vehicle for masking crystallized explosives.

A decade later in Belfast, Northern Ireland, an Algerian man was convicted of possessing 25 computer disk drives detailing how to bring down an aircraft using, among other things, crystallized explosives hidden in a container of talcum powder.

During that trial an FBI explosives expert, Donald Sachtleben, testified he had built and successfully detonated three bombs based on the instructions found in the Algerian's home.

Despite this decade-old knowledge, security officials in Dublin and across Europe still permit passengers to carry on a wide range of receptacles without any visual inspection.

And the increasing probability that terrorists will try to strike with explosive components hidden in hand-luggage has been accompanied by a trend among discount airlines to encourage passengers to bring more carry-on baggage. In recent months Europe's market-leading airline, Irish budget carrier Ryanair, has imposed a mandatory charge on all check-in luggage; an Irish competitor, Aer Lingus, has announced plans to follow suit.

``I'm really surprised the Irish aviation authority hasn't stepped in to moderate this rush to hand luggage by airlines,'' said aviation expert Gerry Byrne. ``All our airport security has been geared towards baggage going into the hold. ... It will overwhelm security if the emphasis is suddenly switched to hand baggage.''

A British security expert, Steve Park, said the likely scenario would involve a two- or three-member terror team boarding the same flight, each carrying a different part of the bomb to be made. ``They could combine resources on the plane. That would be perfectly possible on a busy flight,'' he said.

Critical to conventional bombs is a power source to trigger a detonator. Clonan said cell phones could provide an ideal power-timer unit for a bomb.

``In midflight you could go into the toilet, attach the mobile phone to the explosives and, as the plane makes a final approach over a densely populated urban area, you detonate it,'' he said. To puncture an aircraft's fuselage would require an explosive charge ``half the size of a cigarette packet,'' he said.

Hatcher said ``liquid bombs'' were not the most likely explosive. He said it was far more likely that a terrorist cell would try to smuggle on board explosives in crystalline or powder form and to combine it with an acid-based compound.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff warned Thursday of precisely that threat: ``benign'' materials smuggled on board and mixed to create bomb. He said authorities were analyzing to see how to protect against such a threat.

Hatcher said terrorists might also construct an on-board incendiary bomb based on paraffin or petrol, which if ignited in the mid-Atlantic could destroy an aircraft before it could land.

None of these items, he noted, could be detected by a typical US$5 million (euro4 million) X-ray. Hands-on inspection was the only way to tell if a dark-plastic medicine vial really contains what it says on the label.

``You'll have to carry your prescription and prove to security that the medicine really is what it is. But for 20 million people a year going through Heathrow? How do you do that?'' Hatcher said, foreseeing a future airport arrivals hall with five-hour security checks.

And that scenario, he said, points to a future likely target for terrorists _ detonating bombs in an airport terminal, not on a plane.

``You can carry a bag into the center of an airport with thousands of people around you before you are ever screened. That, too, must change,'' he said


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: airlinesecurity; explosives; liquidbombs; planes; terrorist
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To: weegee
There was a terrorist shooting at the Air Israel counter at LAX a couple years back.

The Air Israel counter at LAX isn't in Israel, and it wasn't protected by Israeli security procedures or personnel.

81 posted on 08/10/2006 12:52:37 PM PDT by wyattearp (Study! Study! Study! Or BONK, BONK, on the head!)
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To: weegee
I agree profiling is fine. But don't restrict the scope of that profile.

Agreed. I'm all for putting the emphasis of the anti-terrorist effort where it belongs.

82 posted on 08/10/2006 12:53:09 PM PDT by TChris (Banning DDT wasn't about birds. It was about power.)
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To: taxcontrol
Heck with some explosives, you don't even need an electrical circuit to set it off.

Yep and there is still no way to detect matches is someone’s pocket.

83 posted on 08/10/2006 1:07:05 PM PDT by usurper (Spelling or grammatical errors in this post can be attributed to the LA City School System)
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To: taxcontrol

In most airline bathrooms I've been in, there is a 120VAC outlet for electric razors.

But all you would need is, perhaps, 3 bottles of nailpolish remover (purchased after security), and a pack of matches, to light a plane on fire from the inside.

The inside has a lot of carpeting and plastic, which would burn like the dickens.

Black smoke choking people to death in a couple minutes. And God help you if you drop down the oxygen masks.


84 posted on 08/10/2006 1:12:08 PM PDT by MonroeDNA (Soros is a communist goon, controlled by communist goons.)
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To: livius

Yeah, I thought it was maybe a year ago there was a lot of talk about explosives being carried on by several different hijackers via body cavities. And it wasn't just males that were the mules.


85 posted on 08/10/2006 1:15:20 PM PDT by bereanway
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To: jla; Alouette
Abut 20 years ago, the Israelis stopped a redheaded, pregnant Irish woman from getting on a plane with a bomb that her Palestinian boyfriend put into her luggage.

==> I wonder if she was humming Come Out Ye Black And Tans to herself.

I dunno... she sounded like a dupe, more than anything else. She was probably a lefty, though. I don't recall that story, but then again, I was only 6 years old at the time!

86 posted on 08/10/2006 1:26:41 PM PDT by Irish_Thatcherite (A vote for Bertie Ahern is a vote for Gerry Adams!|The IRA are actually terrorists, any questions?)
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To: twigs

So search all persons from the Islamic world plus a random selection of others.


87 posted on 08/10/2006 1:28:44 PM PDT by omega4412 (Multiculturalism kills. 9/11, Beslan, Madrid, London)
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To: Irish_Thatcherite
Aren't all Shinners dupes?
And in fairness, the Orange side has their share of Pali-terrorists supporters too.
88 posted on 08/10/2006 1:29:26 PM PDT by jla
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To: Alouette
the airlines will hand out identical jumpsuits and paper booties.

LOL! And as for the Muzzies, give them paper burkhas all around.

89 posted on 08/10/2006 1:30:41 PM PDT by livius
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To: jla
Aren't all Shinners dupes?

No, Shinners know exactly what they are doing - that's what makes them dangerous - those who vote for them in elections are the dupes.

And in fairness, the Orange side has their share of Pali-terrorists supporters too.

I think most of them would lean to Kach, though.

90 posted on 08/10/2006 1:46:38 PM PDT by Irish_Thatcherite (A vote for Bertie Ahern is a vote for Gerry Adams!|The IRA are actually terrorists, any questions?)
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To: omega4412

It works very well for El Al.


91 posted on 08/10/2006 1:51:57 PM PDT by KingofZion
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To: MonroeDNA
Time to require aircraft to have materials that are fire resistant. This is something that should have been done years ago ! It is time to listen to the engineers to design the planes for a change instead of the marketing execs who insist on doing things cheaply and vetoing safety items as suggested.

But all you would need is, perhaps, 3 bottles of nailpolish remover (purchased after security), and a pack of matches, to light a plane on fire from the inside.

The inside has a lot of carpeting and plastic, which would burn like the dickens.

92 posted on 08/10/2006 1:57:06 PM PDT by CORedneck
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To: taxcontrol
LOL The Army has a whole series of Field Manuals (FM) on improvised explosives - all of which are worth reading to avoid some of the more obvious ones.

I won't list the titles or names for obvious reasons - I refer to them collectively as "dead cat bomb books"

Bottom line as pointed out by Heinlein years ago

There are no dangerous weapons, only dangerous people!

93 posted on 08/10/2006 2:06:35 PM PDT by ASOC (The phrase "What if" or "If only" are for children.)
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To: WmShirerAdmirer
Timing of this event is just wonderful. My sister and niece are on vacation in the UK. It's the first time they have traveled outside the US. I'm in Jacksonville, FL this week with a large suitcase, laptop and typical carryon bag. I left my Sony F717 camera and ham radio at home to lighten the carryon. If I can't take the laptop as carryon to fly home, I'm facing a long drive from Jackonville to Pocatello Idaho. I had to make a similar drive from Birmingham, Alabama in September 2003 as Hurrican Ivan was bearing down on me. I can't risk damage to the laptop, so driving is the only way around it. Arrgghh!
94 posted on 08/10/2006 2:11:55 PM PDT by Myrddin
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To: jla
Nah, she was a patsy. The story was that the pali boyfriend knocked her up, but didn't want to marry a white woman. He had some Syrian friends, and they concocted a way to solve both his problem and help the Syrians hit the Israelis. He told the girlfriend that his parents lived in an Arab-Israeli village, and that if she got their approval they could get married. She hopped the next flight to Israel, not knowing he'd stuck a bomb in the bag.

By all accounts, the guy didn't care so much about Israel as he did killing his girlfriend. His Syrian friends saw it as an opportunity, and used his hatred for her to further their own hatred for Israel.

The girlfriend lives in Ireland today, and the Pali lives in a British prison...he won't be eligible for release for another 20-odd years.
95 posted on 08/10/2006 2:38:56 PM PDT by Arthalion
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To: MonroeDNA
My husband used to teach 9th grade chemistry. He had one experiment, which he performed for his class out on the playground, in which he created a raging fire by mixing two common ingredients that can be purchased at any hardware store and drugstore. The fire could not be put out with water, in fact pouring water on it would make it burn hotter.

He stopped doing the experiment about 15 years ago, saying he didn't want to give kids any ideas about trying this at home.

I am not going to say what the two common ingredients are.

96 posted on 08/10/2006 2:45:05 PM PDT by Alouette (Psalms of the Day: 79-82)
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To: bereanway
Yeah, I thought it was maybe a year ago there was a lot of talk about explosives being carried on by several different hijackers via body cavities. And it wasn't just males that were the mules.

That "talk" followed the downing of a Russian airliner by several Chechnyan women. From what the Russians were able to piece together, the women hid high explosives in their V-jays, pulled it out onboard, combined their packages into one large bomb, and blew the thing out of the sky. Short of requiring an internal x-ray of every passenger on an aircraft, I can't see HOW you would block that kind of terrorism.
97 posted on 08/10/2006 2:45:49 PM PDT by Arthalion
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To: ASOC

LOL "Dead cat bomb books".... I like that!


98 posted on 08/10/2006 2:57:54 PM PDT by taxcontrol
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To: Alouette
I am not going to say what the two common ingredients are.

Salt and muriatic acid probably. I can understand your reluctance to identify the chemicals, but the reality is that there are sites on the Internet that can tell you how to create plastic explosives out of aspirin. With that kind of information floating around, I'm not so worried about a low grade chemical reaction that most of us learned in junior high.
99 posted on 08/10/2006 2:59:22 PM PDT by Arthalion
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To: WmShirerAdmirer; Rokke; Red6
Great article, and reading it made plain to see how even the latest security countermeasures could be defeated by a terrorist team desiring to build the bomb on the airplane. This is underlined even more if they have the technological and manufacturing support. And it sure looks that they in fact do have that support.., IRAN

They might succeed again and soon too.

W.
100 posted on 08/10/2006 3:02:11 PM PDT by RunningWolf (2-1 Cav 1975)
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